Memory management of soft references

ABSTRACT

A garbage collector determines a target amount of heap space to deallocate, estimates an amount of heap space reachable by a plurality of soft references by determining a cumulative size of no more than an exploration bound N number of objects reachable from each soft reference, and deallocates heap space based on the target amount and the estimate of the heap space reachable from the soft references. Deallocating heap space may include clearing at least one soft reference. If the estimate is inaccurate, it may be utilized regardless or modified to account for inaccuracy. The least-recently-used or the largest soft reference may be cleared until the total cleared space reachable exceeds the target amount. By performing a bounded analysis, the garbage collector may be able to make a more informed decision about whether to clear a soft reference without consuming the full amount of resources consumed by an exhaustive analysis.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

This invention relates generally to memory management, and morespecifically to methods and systems for garbage collection processing ofsoft references.

BACKGROUND

Memory is generally allocated for a program (or application) duringruntime from a pool of unused memory area called a heap. Garbagecollection is a form of memory management for programs during runtime.During runtime, the garbage collector attempts to identify memoryallocated to objects that are in not use by the program, so that theymay be deallocated (or reclaimed). An object may be in use if the objectcan be accessed or reached by the program's current state. Since theprecise allocation of space in the heap to objects is not known inadvance, the memory allocated to objects cannot be accessed via theactual address of the memory. Rather, the memory may be accessedindirectly by the program utilizing references. An object is reachableif some variable or parameter in the program environment references theobject, either directly or through references from other reachableobjects. Generally, the garbage collector deallocates memory allocatedto objects that are not reachable and does not deallocate memoryallocated to objects that are reachable.

SUMMARY

Conventional garbage collectors may reclaim objects (thus deallocatingmemory allocated to the objects) referenced by strong references, weakreferences, and soft references under different circumstances.Conventional garbage collectors typically do not reclaim objectsreferenced by soft references, unless there exists sufficient heappressure (a condition where the heap is running out of memory space toallocate) that additional heap space needs to be deallocated. Thepresent disclosure describes a garbage collection process that performsbounded estimations of the amount of heap space reachable from each softreference, enabling garbage collectors conforming to aspects of thedisclosure to determine more intelligently and efficiently whether ornot to reclaim objects referenced by the soft references. As theestimations of the amount of heap space reachable from each softreference is bounded, the garbage collectors conforming to aspects ofthe disclosure are able to intelligently and efficiently process softreferences without consuming as much resources as an exhaustiveinvestigation.

In an embodiment, a system may include a computing device which mayinclude a processing unit and a memory communicably coupled to theprocessing unit. The system may perform a computer-implemented methodfor memory management of soft references. The computer-implementedmethod may include the operations of a garbage collector determining atarget amount of heap space to be deallocated for a program by garbagecollection during runtime, estimating an amount of heap space reachable(directly or indirectly) by each of a plurality of soft references inthe program by determining for each of the plurality of soft referencesa cumulative size of no more than a soft reference exploration bound Nnumber of objects reachable from the respective soft reference, anddeallocating heap space based on at least the target amount of heapspace to deallocate and the amount of heap space reachable by theplurality of soft references. Deallocating heap space may include theoperation of clearing at least one of the plurality of soft referencesbased on at least the target amount of heap space to deallocate and theamount of heap space reachable by those soft references.

Determining a target amount of heap space to deallocate may includesetting the target amount equal to a fixed size, a percentage of theheap space, and/or a percentage of free space in the heap. Thedetermination of the target amount may be caused by heap pressure. Thesoft reference exploration bound N may be an integer that is greaterthan zero, such as five or fifteen. The value of the soft referenceexploration bound N may involve a trade-off between the amount of extraprocessing may be performed during garbage collection and the likelihoodthat the estimate may be sufficiently accurate for determining whetheror not to clear a given soft reference. The value of the soft referenceexploration bound N may be higher to obtain more accuracy or lower toobtain greater processing speed. By limiting the estimation of theamount of heap space reachable by a soft reference to the soft referenceexploration bound N number of objects, the time consumed by theestimation may be bounded.

The operation of estimating an amount of heap space reachable by each ofthe plurality of soft references in the program may include determininga set of objects to exclude that are known to be in use by the program(i.e., reachable by a strong reference) and determining a cumulativesize of no more than the soft reference exploration bound N number ofobjects, not included in the set of objects to exclude, reachable fromeach of the soft references.

The operation of estimating may include determining whether the estimateis inaccurate. If there are fewer than the soft reference explorationbound N number of objects reachable from a soft reference, theestimation may be accurate. If there are more than the soft referenceexploration bound N number of objects reachable from the soft reference,the estimation may not be accurate. Even if the estimate is determinedto be inaccurate, the inaccurate cumulative size may be utilized as theestimate as it may represent at least a minimum amount of heap spacereachable by the soft reference. Alternatively, the operation ofestimating may include modifying the estimate to account for inaccuracy,such as by multiplying the cumulative size by a scaling factor orreplacing the cumulative size with a constant.

The operation of clearing soft references may include clearing theleast-recently-used soft reference until the total amount of heap spacethat is reachable by the cleared soft references equals or exceeds thetarget amount of heap space to deallocate. Alternatively, the operationmay include clearing soft references with the largest amount of heapspace reachable until the total amount of heap space that is reachableby the cleared soft references is at least equal to the target amount ofheap space to deallocate. By way of still another alternative, theoperation may include clearing the soft references with the largestamount of heap space reachable which have been least recently used untilthe total amount of heap space that is reachable by the cleared softreferences is at least equal to the target amount of heap space todeallocate.

Various forms of garbage collection, such as single-threaded garbagecollection, parallel garbage collection, concurrent garbage collection,copying garbage collection, compacting garbage collection, tracinggarbage collection, non-moving garbage collection, mark-sweep garbagecollection, generational garbage collection, stop-the-world garbagecollection, incremental garbage collection, and/or a combination of oneor more thereof, may be arranged to conform with aspects of the presentdisclosure.

The present disclosure may provide systems and methods for memorymanagement of soft references. By performing a bounded analysis, thepresent disclosure may enable a garbage collector to make a moreinformed decision about whether to clear a soft reference withoutconsuming the full amount of resources consumed by an exhaustiveanalysis. Performing a bounded analysis may provide a balance betweenmore informed decisions about whether the clear soft references and theamount of processing consumed to make those more informed decisions.

It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description andthe following detailed description are exemplary and explanatory onlyand are not necessarily restrictive of the present disclosure. Theaccompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a partof the specification, illustrate subject matter of the disclosure.Together, the descriptions and the drawings serve to explain theprinciples of the disclosure.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The present disclosure may be better understood, and its numerousfeatures made apparent to those skilled in the art by referencing theaccompanying drawings.

FIG. 1 is a block diagram illustrating a system 100 for memorymanagement of soft references, in accordance with an embodiment of thepresent disclosure;

FIG. 2 is a method diagram illustrating a method 200 for memorymanagement of soft references, which may be performed by the system 100of FIG. 1, in accordance with an embodiment of the present disclosure;

FIG. 3 is a flow chart illustrating an example flow of an implementationof the method of FIG. 2, in accordance with an embodiment of the presentdisclosure;

FIG. 4A is a diagram illustrating garbage collection for a program;

FIG. 4B is a diagram illustrating garbage collection for a program;

FIG. 4C is a diagram illustrating garbage collection for a program;

FIG. 4D is a diagram illustrating garbage collection for a program; and

FIG. 4E is a diagram illustrating garbage collection for a program.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

Software programs include numerous objects that are allocated memory inthe computer system where the program runs. References, including strongreferences, weak references, and soft references, are used by a programto indirectly access the memory allocated to the objects. Conventionalgarbage collectors may reclaim objects referenced by strong references,weak references, and soft references under different circumstances.Conventional garbage collectors typically reclaim objects referencedexclusively by weak references, and conversely do not reclaim objectsreferenced by strong references (as this indicates the objects are inuse) or by soft references unless heap space needs to be deallocatedbecause of heap pressure (a condition where the heap is running out ofmemory space to allocate). The present disclosure describes a garbagecollection process that performs bounded estimations of the amount ofheap space reachable from soft references, enabling garbage collectorsconforming to aspects of the disclosure to determine more intelligentlyand efficiently whether or not to reclaim objects referenced by the softreferences. As the estimations of the amount of heap space reachablefrom each soft reference is bounded, the garbage collectors conformingto aspects of the disclosure are able to intelligently and efficientlyprocess soft references without consuming as much resources as anexhaustive investigation.

If strong references were the only references, a program would be unableto interact with the memory allocated to an object without preventingthe garbage collector from deallocating the memory. For example, theprogram may use a reference to an object to attempt to determine whetherthe memory allocated to the object has been deallocated. In such a caseif the reference was a strong reference the memory allocated to theobject would never be deallocated because the existence of the strongreference indicates to the garbage collector that the object is in use.However, if the reference was a weak reference memory allocated to theobject would not be prevented from being deallocated. If the onlyreference to an object is a weak reference, conventional garbagecollectors generally determine that the object is not in use anddeallocate memory allocated to the object. Thus, the program may utilizeweak references to interact with the memory allocated to objects withoutpreventing the garbage collector from deallocating the memory.

If the only references to an object are soft references, conventionalgarbage collectors may choose to attempt to reclaim the object byclearing the soft reference(s) which refer to the object. Clearing asoft reference may constitute setting the soft reference to point tonull such that it no longer refers to an object. The garbage collectormay clear the soft reference (potentially making the previouslyreferred-to object eligible for deallocation) when the object was notcreated within a certain period of time, the object was not accessedwithin a certain period of time, and/or the heap is running out ofmemory space to allocate (i.e., heap pressure). The garbage collectormay choose to clear a particular soft reference when the object wascreated within the certain period of time, the object was accessedwithin the certain period of time, and/or the heap is not running out ofmemory space to allocate (i.e., heap pressure). Thus, soft referencesmay provide the program the ability to interact with the memoryallocated to an object without preventing the garbage collector fromdeallocating the memory when certain circumstances are met.

By way of example, a program may read information from a file. Theprogram may store that information in memory so that the program hasquick access to the information. However, quick access to theinformation may not benefit the program if the program cannot continueexecution because the program runs out of heap space. Because theinformation is present in the file, the program can permit theinformation to be flushed from memory in order to free-up heap space.Time may be consumed by reading the file again, but the extra time istypically preferable to preventing the program from continuing toexecute. Therefore, the program may choose to refer to the informationin memory utilizing a soft reference. By utilizing a soft reference torefer to the information in memory, the program informs the garbagecollector that the information may be kept in memory if heap space isavailable in order to avoid the time to repeatedly read the informationfrom the file, but the information should be evicted from memory ifthere is sufficient heap pressure.

When a conventional garbage collector is determining whether to clearone or more soft references based on heap pressure, the garbagecollector may determine a target amount of heap space to attempt todeallocate. However, conventional garbage collectors generally do notknow how much otherwise unreachable space of the heap (i.e., space inthe heap not also reachable from one or more strong references) isreachable from each of the soft references in a program. Thus, thegarbage collector does not know how much space in the heap (i.e.,memory) would be deallocated (i.e., reclaimed) by clearing one of moreof the soft references. As a result, the garbage collector may choose tomerely clear all soft references (or may randomly clear one or more softreferences) due to lack of information about the amount of space in theheap that may be deallocated by clearing one or more of the softreferences. One solution would be to have the garbage collectoriteratively ascertain the size of every otherwise unreachable objectreachable from each soft reference to determine the amount of space inthe heap that may be deallocated by clearing each soft reference.However, the amount of processing consumed to exhaustively make thisdetermination may be prohibitively expensive. Garbage collectionconsumes resources (such as processing time) that otherwise may beutilized for the execution of the program. The more processing timeconsumed by the garbage collector, the less processing time is availablefor program execution. Thus, if the garbage collector consumes excessiveprocessing time, the execution of the program may be adversely impacted(i.e., the execution of the program may be delayed due to a lack ofavailable processing resources). The present disclosure improves thegarbage collection process utilizing bounded estimations of heap spacereachable from soft references, thus enabling garbage collectors todetermine more intelligently whether or not to clear soft references.

FIG. 1 illustrates a system 100 for memory management of softreferences, in accordance with an embodiment of the present disclosure.The system 100 may include a computing device 101 which may include aprocessing unit 102 (which may include a garbage collector component104) and a memory 103 communicably coupled to the processing unit 102.While the system 100 has been described as including computing device101, a single processing unit 102, and a single memory 103, it will beunderstood that system 100 is illustrative and that multiple computingdevices 101 (which may be communicably coupled), multiple processingunits 102, and/or multiple memories 103 may be utilized withoutdeparting from the scope of the present disclosure. The computing device101 may also include one or more tangible machine-readable storagemedia, communicably coupled to the processing unit 102 and/or the memory103, which may include, but are not limited to, magnetic storage media(e.g., floppy diskette), optical storage media (e.g., CD-ROM);magneto-optical storage media, read only memory, random access memory,erasable programmable memory (e.g., EPROM and EEPROM); flash memory, orother types of media suitable for storing electronic information. Thecomputing device 101 may also include (not shown) one or more inputand/or output devices (including, but not limited to displays,keyboards, mice, printers, scanners, and so forth), one or more busses(including, but not limited to, universal serial bus, small computersystem interface, and so forth), and/or one or more communicationcomponents (including, but not limited to, modems, Ethernet adapters,wireless Ethernet adapters, and so forth).

FIG. 2 illustrates a method 200 for memory management of softreferences, which may be performed by the system 100, in accordance withan embodiment of the present disclosure. The method 200 may comprise acomputer-implemented method. The computer-implemented method may beperformed by a processing unit, such as the processing unit 101,executing one or more sets of instructions included in a computerprogram product stored in a machine-readable medium, such as the memory103.

In a first operation 201, a garbage collector may determine a targetamount of heap space to be deallocated for a program by garbagecollection during runtime. Determining a target amount of heap space tobe deallocated may include setting the target amount equal to a fixedsize (such as 100 kilobytes), a percentage of the heap space (such asfive percent of the heap space), and/or a percentage of free space inthe heap (such as thirty percent of the space in the heap which has notbeen allocated). The determination of the target amount may be caused byheap pressure.

In a second operation 202, the garbage collector may estimate an amountof heap space reachable by each of a plurality of soft references in theprogram. Heap space may be reachable by a soft reference if the softreference may be utilized, directly or indirectly, to access one or moreobjects the heap space is allocated to. In one example, to estimate theamount of heap space reachable by each of the plurality of softreferences in the program, the garbage collector determines, for each ofthe plurality of soft references, a cumulative size of no more than asoft reference exploration bound N number of objects reachable from therespective soft reference. The soft reference exploration bound N may bean integer that is greater than zero, such as five or fifteen. Bylimiting the estimation of the amount of heap space reachable by a softreference to the soft reference exploration bound N number of objects,the time consumed by the estimation may be bounded. Because theestimation time is bounded, the amount of heap space reachable from softreferences (even if that amount may not be completely accurate) may beconsidered in processing soft references without consuming as muchresources as an exhaustive investigation.

In third operation 203, the garbage collector may deallocate heap spacebased on at least the target amount of heap space to deallocate and theamount of heap space reachable by the plurality of soft references. Insome embodiments, the operation 203 of deallocating heap space mayinclude the operation of clearing at least one of the plurality of softreferences based on at least the target amount of heap space todeallocate and the amount of heap space reachable by the at least one ofthe plurality of soft references. Thus, the garbage collector may selectone or more soft references to be cleared, potentially resulting in thedeallocation of the associated heap space, taking into consideration inthe selection the amount of heap space reachable by the cleared softreferences and the target amount of heap space to deallocate.

For example, the program may have a heap space of 500 kilobytes, 450kilobytes of which has already been allocated. Based on the heappressure (i.e., only 50 kilobytes of the heap remains to be allocated),the garbage collector may determine to deallocate twenty percent of theheap space, or 100 kilobytes in order to alleviate the heap pressure.The garbage collector may estimate that 200 kilobytes of heap space isallocated to objects only referenced by soft references. The garbagecollector may then determine to clear fifty percent heap space allocatedto objects only referenced by soft references based on the percentage ofheap space the garbage collector determined to deallocate (100kilobytes) and the estimated amount of heap space allocated to objectsonly referenced by soft references (200 kilobytes).

Referring again to operation 202, the value of the soft referenceexploration bound N may involve a trade-off between the amount of extraprocessing that would be performed during garbage collection and thelikelihood that the estimate may be sufficiently accurate fordetermining whether or not to clear a given soft reference. Hence, thevalue of the soft reference exploration bound N may be made higher toobtain more accuracy or lower to obtain faster processing speed. Themethod of FIG. 2 may impose some extra (though bounded) work on thegarbage collector, as compared to not considering the amount of spacereachable from soft references in determining which soft references toclear. However, the extra work may only be imposed on the garbagecollector if soft references are used. In the event a program does notutilize soft references, method 200 may not be performed and the garbagecollector may not need to expend the extra work for the program.

The operation 202 of estimating an amount of heap space reachable byeach of the plurality of soft references in the program may includedetermining a set of objects to exclude that are in use (i.e., reachableby a strong reference) and determining a cumulative size of no more thanthe soft reference exploration bound N number of objects reachable fromone of the soft references that are not included in the set of objectsto exclude. Thus, the estimation of the amount of heap space reachablefrom a soft reference may not include objects that are reachable fromthe soft reference but are considered in use. Objects that are reachablefrom the soft reference but are considered in use would not bedeallocated even if the soft reference were cleared, as they are in use.In this way, the estimate of the amount of heap space reachable by asoft reference is not over-inflated by counting heap space which isknown to be strongly reachable and therefore would not be deallocatedregardless of which soft references were cleared.

If there are fewer than the soft reference exploration bound N number ofobjects reachable from a given soft reference, the estimation ofoperation 202 may be accurate as the cumulative size of the no more thanthe soft reference exploration bound N of objects reachable from thesoft reference may include the size of all of the objects reachable fromthe soft reference. If there are more than the soft referenceexploration bound N number of objects reachable from the soft reference,the estimation of 202 may not be accurate as the estimate may notinclude the size of at least one otherwise unreachable object that isreachable from the soft reference. The operation 202 of estimating theamount of heap space reachable by each of the plurality of softreferences may include determining whether the estimate is inaccuratebased on whether the estimate is based on more than or fewer than thesoft reference exploration bound N number of objects. However, eventhough the estimate may be determined to be inaccurate, it mayconstitute a lower bound to the amount of heap space that is reachablefrom the soft reference. For example, 300 kilobytes of heap space may beestimated as reachable from a soft reference, contained in the softreference exploration bound N number of objects reachable from the softreference. In this example, 500 kilobytes may actually be reachable fromthe soft reference, contained in the soft reference exploration boundN+3 number of objects reachable from the soft reference. Even though the300 kilobytes estimate may be determined to be inaccurate, as it is thesize of fewer than all the objects reachable from the soft reference,300 kilobytes may constitute a lower bound as there is at least 300kilobytes of heap space reachable from the soft reference. Thus, theamount of heap space reachable from the soft reference may not besmaller than the inaccurate estimate.

Inaccurate estimates may not necessarily produce suboptimal results. Insome cases, a program may include a large number of soft references,each of which reference a small object graph. In these cases the programmay be utilizing soft references to cache individual objects. In othercases, the program may include a small number of soft references, eachof which points to a large object graph. In these cases, a single softreference may point to the cache as a whole. In the former cases, method200 may provide an exact inexpensive analysis, as the graphs to betraversed are shallow. In the latter cases, bounded analysis may quicklyindicate the presence of a large amount of data beyond the bound. Thus,even inaccurate estimates may provide useful, if inaccurate, informationabout soft references.

Even though the estimate of the amount of heap space reachable by a softreference may be determined to be inaccurate, the inaccurate cumulativesize of the no more than the soft reference exploration bound N numberof objects reachable from a soft reference may be utilized as theestimate as it may represent at least a minimum amount of heap spacereachable by the soft reference. Alternatively, the operation 202 ofestimating the amount of heap space reachable by the soft reference mayinclude modifying the estimate to account for inaccuracy if the estimateis determined to be inaccurate. If the estimate is determined to beinaccurate, the cumulative size of the no more than the soft referenceexploration bound N number of objects reachable from the soft referencemay be multiplied by a scaling factor. For example, the garbagecollector may adaptively determine a scaling factor utilizing profilingdata of previous garbage collection cycles. The garbage collector maydetermine the scaling factor by dividing an actual amount of spacedeallocated by one or more previous garbage collection cycles by theprevious total estimated heap space reachable by one or more softreferences that were cleared by the one or more previous garbagecollection cycles. In this case, the scaling factor may represent anadaptive ratio of how much heap space the garbage collector has actuallybeen able to reclaim to the potential heap space the garbage collectorhas estimated may potentially be reclaimed by clearing the softreferences. The garbage collector may smooth the empirically derivedscaling factor utilizing a suitable filtering technique beforemultiplying the cumulative size of the no more than the soft referenceexploration bound N number of objects reachable from the soft referenceby the scaling factor. In another example, statistical analysis of softreferences may have been performed during the execution of a variety ofprograms which indicated that soft references that are able to reachmore than the soft reference exploration bound N number of objects aregenerally, on average, able to reach a total amount of heap space threetimes larger than they are able to access through the soft referenceexploration bound N number of objects. In such a case, if the estimateis determined to be inaccurate, the cumulative size of the no more thanthe soft reference exploration bound N number of objects reachable fromthe soft reference may be multiplied by a scaling factor of three, whichmay improve the accuracy of the estimate. Alternatively, if the estimateis determined to be inaccurate, the cumulative size of the no more thanthe soft reference exploration bound N number of objects reachable fromthe soft reference may be replaced with a constant. For example,statistical analysis of soft references may have been performed duringthe execution of a variety of programs which indicated that softreferences that are able to reach more than the soft referenceexploration bound N number of objects generally are able to reach anaverage of 300K of heap space. In such a case, if the estimate isdetermined to be inaccurate, the cumulative size of the no more than thesoft reference exploration bound N number of objects reachable from thesoft reference may be replaced with 300K, which may improve the accuracyof the estimate.

The operation of clearing the at least one of the plurality of softreferences may include clearing the least-recently-used soft referencesuntil the total amount of heap space that is reachable by the clearedsoft references equals or exceeds the target amount of heap space todeallocate. A list of the soft references may be generated and orderedin a least-recently used order. Then, one or more of the soft referencesmay be cleared, based on the ordering of the list, until the total spacethat is estimated reachable by the cleared soft references equals orexceeds the target amount of heap space to deallocate. In this way,garbage collection may attempt to deallocate the desired amount of heapspace by clearing the soft references which may be least likely to beneeded by virtue of being the least recently used.

Alternatively, the operation of clearing the at least one of theplurality of soft references may include clearing soft references withthe largest amount of heap space reachable until the total amount ofheap space that is reachable by the cleared soft references is at leastequal to the target amount of heap space to deallocate. A list of thesoft references may be generated and ordered in order of decreasingestimated amount of heap space reachable. Then, one or more of the softreferences may be cleared, based on the ordering of the list, until thetotal space that is estimated reachable by the cleared soft referencesequals or exceeds the amount of heap space to deallocate. In this way,garbage collection may attempt to deallocate the desired amount of heapspace by clearing the fewest soft references reasonably possible, thusconsuming as little time as possible to deallocate the desired amount ofheap space and preserving as many of the soft references as isreasonably possible.

In other embodiments, the operation of clearing the at least one of theplurality of soft references may include approaches for clearing the atleast one of the plurality of soft references other than clearingleast-recently-used soft references or clearing soft references with thelargest amount of heap space reachable.

Various forms of garbage collection, such as single-threaded garbagecollection, parallel garbage collection, concurrent garbage collection,copying garbage collection, compacting garbage collection, tracinggarbage collection, non-moving garbage collection, mark-sweep garbagecollection, generational garbage collection, stop-the-world garbagecollection, incremental garbage collection, and/or a combination of oneor more thereof, may be arranged to conform with aspects of the presentdisclosure. Single-threaded garbage collection may involve utilizing asingle thread for the garbage collection process. Parallel garbagecollection may involve parallelizing the garbage collection process byutilizing multiple threads to execute the garbage collection process.Concurrent garbage collection may constitute running the garbagecollection process substantially concurrently with the execution of theprogram. Copying garbage collection may encompass garbage collectionprocesses that copy in-use objects from the heap space into a new heapspace. Compacting garbage collection may include garbage collectionprocesses where in-use objects are moved to contiguous locations in theheap. Tracing garbage collection may constitute determining whichobjects are reachable or potentially reachable and discarding allremaining objects. Non-moving garbage collection may involve releasingobjects that are not in use without altering memory locations.Mark-sweep garbage collection may involve marking in-use objects andthen releasing unmarked objects. Generational garbage collection mayencompass dividing objects into generations based on time from creationand treating the different generations of objects differently during thegarbage collection process. Stop-the-world garbage collection mayconstitute halting execution of the program during garbage collection.Incremental garbage collection may include interleaving the garbagecollection process with execution of the program.

FIG. 3 illustrates the flow of an example implementation of the methodof FIG. 2, in accordance with an embodiment of the present disclosure.At block 301, a garbage collector may determine a target amount of heapspace to be deallocated for a program during runtime. At block 302, thegarbage collector may mark strongly referenced objects and queue softreferences. At block 303, the garbage collector may estimate the amountof space reachable from each of the queued soft references. At block304, the garbage collector may determine if a soft reference in thequeue of soft references has not been processed. If all soft referenceshave been processed, the flow may proceed to block 310. If a softreference in the queue of soft references has not been processed, theflow may proceed to block 305 and the garbage collector may process thesoft reference.

At block 305, the garbage collector may determine whether there is anunmarked object directly or indirectly reachable from the softreference. If there are no unmarked objects reachable from the softreference, the flow may proceed to block 308. If there are unmarkedobjects reachable from the soft reference, the flow may proceed to block306. At block 306, the garbage collector may determine if an array ofobjects for the soft reference contains a soft reference explorationbound N number of objects. If the array contains the soft referenceexploration bound N number of objects, the flow may proceed to block308. If the array does not contain the soft reference exploration boundN number of objects, the flow may proceed to block 307. At block 307,the garbage collector may mark the unmarked object, add the object tothe array, and add the object's size to an accumulator. The flow maythen proceed to block 305.

At block 308, the garbage collector may tag the estimate as inaccurate.The flow may then proceed to block 309. At block 309, the garbagecollector may unmark objects in the array. The flow may then proceed toblock 304.

At block 310, the garbage collector may deallocate space in the heapbased on the target amount of heap space to be deallocated and theestimates of the amount of space reachable from each of the queued softreferences. The operation of deallocating space in the heap may includeclearing one or more soft references based on the target amount of heapspace to be deallocated and the estimates of the amount of spacereachable from each of the queued soft references. The flow may thenproceed to block 311. At block 311, the garbage collector may unmark thestrongly referenced objects and the soft references.

By way of example of the method of FIG. 2, FIG. 4A is a diagramillustrating garbage collection for a program. In this example, theprogram may be a Java™ program and the garbage collection may beperformed by a single-threaded mark-sweep garbage collector configuredto conform with aspects of the method of FIG. 2 or some alterationthereof. The root set of references may include references from anywherein the call stack of the program (local variables and parameters infunctions currently being invoked) and any global variables. The rootset of references may reference objects in the heap. As illustrated, theheap includes memory that has been allocated to objects A-J.

A target amount of heap space for the program to be deallocated by thegarbage collection may be determined. The target amount to deallocatemay be determined based on a fixed size, a percentage of the heap space,and/or a percentage of the heap space. In this example, the garbagecollector may attempt to deallocate a fixed size of 50K.

During a global marking phase, the garbage collector may mark objectswhich are in use (i.e., referenced by strong references), queue up softreferences without marking their referents, and calculate the amount ofspace in the heap that was marked. Objects F, I, and J are shaded inFIG. 4A to illustrate that they have been marked by the global markingphase and thusly are referenced by strong references in the root set ofreferences. Object F may have a size of 25K (kilobytes), object I mayhave a size of 300K, and object J may have a size of 10K. The garbagecollector may determine that the amount of space in the heap that wasmarked was 335K. Objects A and G may be soft references that may havebeen marked and queued up during the global marking phase. In Java™,soft references may be implemented as reference objects. A referenceobject may encapsulate a reference to some other object, which is calledthe referent. Objects B, C, D, E, and H are objects which have beenallocated memory in the heap that are reachable through soft reference Aor G, respectively.

The garbage collector may then iterate over the queued up softreferences. For each of the queued up soft references, the garbagecollector may perform a local and bounded marking phase to determine howmuch space is reachable from the soft reference. The local and boundedmarking phase may determine a cumulative size of no more than a softreference exploration bound N number of objects reachable from the softreference. The soft reference exploration bound N may constitute aninteger that may be one or greater. In this example, the soft referenceexploration bound N may be three. The local and bounded marking phasemay determine the cumulative size of no more than the soft referenceexploration bound N number of objects reachable from the soft referencethat have not already been marked as in-use by the global marking phase.The garbage collector may utilize an array of fixed length N. Thegarbage collector may utilize the array to keep track of objects markedduring the local and bounded marking phase. The garbage collector mayvisit up to the soft reference exploration bound N number of objectsreachable from the soft reference, mark each object, add the address ofthe object to the array, and add the size of the object to anaccumulator. At the end of the local and bounded marking phase, theobjects marked during the local and bounded marking phase may beunmarked. The garbage collector may unmark the objects whose addressesare recorded in the array.

FIG. 4B illustrates the local and bounded marking phase to determine howmuch space is reachable from the soft reference A. During the local andbounded marking phase, objects B, C, and D may be marked because theyare reachable from the soft reference A. As illustrated in FIG. 4C, theaddresses for objects B, C, and D may be added to array 401 C which isof fixed length N, or three. The sizes of objects B, C, and D may beadded to accumulator 402C. In this example, object B may have a size of1K (kilobyte), object C may have a size of 2K, object D may have a sizeof 100K and object E may have a size of 20K. Thus, at the end of thelocal and bounded marking phase for the soft reference A, theaccumulator 402C may have a value of 103K. The estimated amount of heapspace reachable from the soft reference A is therefore 103K, or thevalue of the accumulator 402C. Object E may not be marked, the addressof object E may not be added to the array 401C, and the size of object E(20K) may not be added to the accumulator 402C as N (i.e., three)objects (B, C, and D) reachable from the soft reference A have alreadybeen visited. Then, the garbage collector may utilize array 401C tounmark objects B, C, and D (as seen in FIG. 4A).

The estimated amount of heap space reachable from the soft reference Aof 103K may not be accurate. The actual amount of heap space reachablefrom the soft reference A may be 123K (i.e., the size of objects B, C,D, and E). Because the estimated amount of heap space reachable from thesoft reference A (i.e., the value of the accumulator 402C) is the sizeof only the soft reference exploration bound N number of objects, it maybe determined that the estimated amount of heap space reachable from thesoft reference A is not accurate.

As the estimated amount of heap space reachable from the soft referenceA is determined to be inaccurate, the estimate may be modified toaccount for the inaccuracy, such as by multiplying the estimate by ascaling factor or replacing the estimate with a constant. However, inthis example the garbage collector utilizes the estimate even though theestimate is inaccurate because even though 103K is not the full amountof heap space reachable from the soft reference A, there is at least103K of heap space reachable from the soft reference A.

FIG. 4D illustrates the local and bounded marking phase to determine howmuch space is reachable from the soft reference G. During the local andbounded marking phase, object H may be marked because it is reachablefrom the soft reference G. As illustrated in FIG. 4E, the addresses forobject H may be added to array 401E which is of fixed length N, orthree. The sizes of object H may be added to accumulator 402E. In thisexample, object H may have a size of 50K. Thus, at the end of the localand bounded marking phase for the soft reference G, the accumulator 402Emay have a value of 50K. The estimated amount of heap space reachablefrom soft reference G is therefore 50K, or the value of the accumulator402E. Object I is not marked, the address of object I is not added tothe array 401E, and the size of object I may not be added to theaccumulator 402E even though object I is reachable from the softreference G and/or the object H because the object I has already beenmarked by the global marking phase as in-use. Then, the garbagecollector may utilize array 401E to unmark object H (as seen in FIG.4A).

The garbage collector may clear one or more of soft references A and Gat least based on the target amount of heap space to deallocate and theestimated amount of heap space reachable by each of the soft referencesA and G.

For example, the garbage collector may clear the least-recently-usedsoft reference until the total estimated amount of heap space reachableby the cleared soft references meets or exceeds the target amount ofheap space to deallocate. The garbage collector may order the softreferences A and G in a list in a least-recently used order. In thisexample, the soft reference A has been used most recently so the listmay be ordered with the soft reference G first and the soft reference Asecond. Based on the list, the garbage collector may clear theleast-recently-used soft reference, or the soft reference G. Theestimated amount of heap space reachable by the cleared soft reference Gis 50K. This meets the target amount to deallocate of 50K and thegarbage collector may cease clearing soft references, leaving the softreference A uncleared.

By way of an alternative example, the garbage collector may clear softreferences with the largest amount of heap space reachable until thetotal amount of heap space reachable by the cleared soft referencesmeets or exceeds the target amount of heap space to deallocate. Thegarbage collector may order the soft references A and G in a list inorder of decreasing estimated amount of heap space reachable. Theestimated amount reachable of the soft reference A is 103K. Theestimated amount reachable of the soft reference G is 50K. Thus, thelist may be ordered with the soft reference A first and the softreference G second. Based on the list, the garbage collector may clearthe soft reference with the largest amount of heap space reachable, orthe soft reference A. The estimated amount of heap space reachable bythe cleared soft reference A is 103K. This exceeds the target amount todeallocate of 50K and the garbage collector may cease clearing softreferences, leaving the soft reference G uncleared.

The present disclosure may provide systems and methods for memorymanagement of soft references. By performing a bounded analysis, thepresent disclosure may enable a garbage collector to make a moreinformed decision about whether to clear a soft reference withoutconsuming the full amount of resources consumed by an exhaustiveanalysis. Performing a bounded analysis may provide a balance betweenmore informed decisions about whether the clear soft references and theamount of processing consumed to make those more informed decisions.

The description above includes example systems, methods, techniques,instruction sequences, and/or computer program products that embodytechniques of the present disclosure. However, it is understood that thedescribed disclosure may be practiced without these specific details.

In the present disclosure, the methods disclosed may be implemented assets of instructions or software readable by a device. Further, it isunderstood that the specific order or hierarchy of steps in the methodsdisclosed are examples of exemplary approaches. Based upon designpreferences, it is understood that the specific order or hierarchy ofsteps in the method can be rearranged while remaining within thedisclosed subject matter. The accompanying method claims presentelements of the various steps in a sample order, and are not necessarilymeant to be limited to the specific order or hierarchy presented.

The described disclosure may be provided as a computer program product,or software, that may include a machine-readable medium having storedthereon instructions, which may be used to program a computer system (orother electronic devices) to perform a process according to the presentdisclosure. A machine-readable medium includes any mechanism for storinginformation in a form (e.g., software, processing application) readablyby a machine (e.g., a computer). The machine-readable medium mayinclude, but is not limited to, magnetic storage medium (e.g., floppydiskette), optical storage medium (e.g., CD-ROM); magneto-opticalstorage medium, read only memory (ROM); random access memory (RAM);erasable programmable memory (e.g., EPROM and EEPROM); flash memory; orother types of medium suitable for storing electronic instructions.

It is believed that the present disclosure and many of its attendantadvantages will be understood by the foregoing description, and it willbe apparent that various changes may be made in the form, constructionand arrangement of the components without departing from the disclosedsubject matter or without sacrificing all of its material advantages.The form described is merely explanatory, and it is the intention of thefollowing claims to encompass and include such changes.

While the present disclosure has been described with reference tovarious embodiments, it will be understood that these embodiments areillustrative and that the scope of the disclosure is not limited tothem. Many variations, modifications, additions, and improvements arepossible. More generally, embodiments in accordance with the presentdisclosure have been described in the context or particular embodiments.Functionality may be separated or combined in blocks differently invarious embodiments of the disclosure or described with differentterminology. These and other variations, modifications, additions, andimprovements may fall within the scope of the disclosure as defined inthe claims that follow.

1. A computer-implemented method for memory management, comprising:determining a target amount of heap space to be deallocated for aprogram by garbage collection during runtime; estimating an amount ofheap space reachable by each of a plurality of soft references in theprogram by determining for each of the plurality of soft references acumulative size of no more than N objects reachable from the respectivesoft reference, wherein N is an integer greater than zero; anddeallocating heap space based on at least the target amount of heapspace to deallocate and the amount of heap space reachable by theplurality of soft references.
 2. The computer-implemented method ofclaim 1, wherein said deallocating heap space based on at least thetarget amount of heap space to deallocate and the amount of heap spacereachable by the plurality of soft references comprises: clearing atleast one of the plurality of soft references based on at least thetarget amount of heap space to deallocate and the amount of heap spacereachable by the at least one of the plurality of soft references. 3.The computer-implemented method of claim 2, wherein said clearing atleast one of the plurality of soft references based on at least thetarget amount of heap space to deallocate and the amount of heap spacereachable by the at least one of the plurality of soft referencescomprises: clearing least-recently-used soft references of the pluralityof soft references until a total amount of heap space reachable by thecleared least-recently-used soft references is at least equal to thetarget amount of heap space to deallocate.
 4. The computer-implementedmethod of claim 2, wherein said clearing at least one of the pluralityof soft references based on at least the target amount of heap space todeallocate and the amount of heap space reachable by the at least one ofthe plurality of soft references comprises: clearing soft references ofthe plurality of soft references when the amount of heap space reachableby each of the soft references of the plurality of soft references is atleast as large as the amount of heap space reachable by other softreferences of the plurality of soft references until a total amount ofheap space reachable by the cleared soft references is at least equal tothe target amount of heap space to deallocate.
 5. Thecomputer-implemented method of claim 1, wherein said estimating theamount of heap space reachable by each of the plurality of softreferences comprises: determining an excluded set of objects in theprogram that are in use; and determining the cumulative size of no morethan N objects reachable from the respective soft reference and not inthe excluded set of objects.
 6. The computer-implemented method of claim5, wherein said estimating the amount of heap space reachable by each ofthe plurality of soft references further comprises: if the cumulativesize is the size of fewer than N objects, determining that thecumulative size is accurate; and if the cumulative size is the size of Nobjects, determining that the cumulative size is not accurate.
 7. Thecomputer-implemented method of claim 6, wherein said estimating theamount of heap space reachable by each of the plurality of softreferences further comprises: estimating the amount of heap spacereachable by the respective soft reference as the cumulative size whenthe cumulative size is not accurate.
 8. The computer-implemented methodof claim 6, wherein said estimating the amount of heap space reachableby each of the plurality of soft references further comprises: if thecumulative size is not accurate, estimating the amount of heap spacereachable by the respective soft reference as the cumulative sizemultiplied by a scaling factor.
 9. The computer-implemented method ofclaim 6, wherein the scaling factor is determined by dividing an actualamount of heap space deallocated by at least one previous garbagecollection cycle by a previous total estimated heap space reachable byat least one cleared soft reference that was cleared by the at least oneprevious garbage collection cycle.
 10. The computer-implemented methodof claim 6, wherein said estimating the amount of heap space reachableby each of the plurality of soft references further comprises: if thecumulative size is not accurate, estimating the amount of heap spacereachable by the respective soft reference as a constant.
 11. Thecomputer-implemented method of claim 1, wherein said determining atarget amount of heap space to be deallocated for a program by garbagecollection during runtime comprises: setting the target amount of heapspace to be deallocated equal to a fixed size.
 12. Thecomputer-implemented method of claim 1, wherein said determining atarget amount of heap space to be deallocated for a program by garbagecollection during runtime comprises: setting the target amount of heapspace to be deallocated equal to a percentage of the heap space.
 13. Thecomputer-implemented method of claim 1, wherein said determining atarget amount of heap space to be deallocated for a program by garbagecollection during runtime comprises: setting the target amount of heapspace to be deallocated equal to a percentage of free space in the heapspace.
 14. The computer-implemented method of claim 1, wherein thegarbage collection comprises at least one of parallel garbagecollection, concurrent garbage collection, copying garbage collection,compacting garbage collection, tracing garbage collection, non-movinggarbage collection, mark-sweep garbage collection, generational garbagecollection, stop-the-world garbage collection, incremental garbagecollection, and single-threaded garbage collection.
 15. Thecomputer-implemented method of claim 1, wherein the garbage collectioncomprises single-threaded, mark-sweep garbage collection and saidestimating the amount of heap space reachable by each of the pluralityof soft references comprises: marking objects in the program that are inuse; and determining a cumulative size of no more than N unmarkedobjects reachable from each of the plurality of soft references.
 16. Thecomputer-implemented method of claim 15, wherein said cumulative size ofno more than N unmarked objects reachable from each of the plurality ofsoft references comprises: for each of the plurality of soft references,determining the cumulative sum by summing a size of each of the no morethan N unmarked objects reachable from the respective soft reference.17. The computer-implemented method of claim 16, wherein saiddetermining the cumulative sum by summing a size of each of the no morethan N unmarked objects reachable from the respective soft referencecomprises: for each of the no more than N unmarked objects reachablefrom the respective soft reference, performing the operations of:selecting an unmarked object that is reachable from the respective softreference; marking the object; listing the object in a visited objectlist by adding an address for the object to an N element array; andadding an object size of the object to an accumulator for the respectivesoft reference.
 18. The computer-implemented method of claim 16, whereinsaid determining the cumulative sum by summing a size of each of the nomore than N unmarked objects reachable from the respective softreference further comprises: unmarking objects listed in the visitedobject list.
 19. A system, comprising: a processing unit that performsgarbage collection for a program during runtime; and a memory,communicably coupled to the processing unit, wherein the processing unitis operable to determine a target amount of heap space to be deallocatedfor the program by the garbage collection, estimate an amount of heapspace reachable by each of a plurality of soft references in the programby determining for each of the plurality of soft references a cumulativesize of no more than N objects reachable from the respective softreference, and deallocate heap space based on at least the target amountof heap space to deallocate and the amount of heap space reachable bythe plurality of soft references; wherein N is an integer greater thanzero.
 20. A computer program product, including a computer readablestorage medium and instructions executable by a processing unit tangiblyembodied in the computer readable storage medium, the instructionscomprising: a first set of instructions for determining a target amountof heap space to be deallocated for a program by garbage collectionduring runtime; a second set of instructions for estimating an amount ofheap space reachable by each of a plurality of soft references in theprogram by determining for each of the plurality of soft references acumulative size of no more than N objects reachable from the respectivesoft reference, wherein N is an integer greater than zero; and a thirdset of instructions for deallocating heap space based on at least thetarget amount of heap space to deallocate and the amount of heap spacereachable by the plurality of soft references.